Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv] [adv] come to " in BNC.
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1 | The Christmas Eve assault has only just come to light because the 13-year-old victim was too terrified to report it earlier . |
2 | Peter Chapple-Hyam , his trainer , says that Rodrigo de Triano , winner of the Middle Park Stakes , has only really come to himself this week . |
3 | The road has only recently come to Uçagiz ; the whole area emanates a powerful feeling of being on the edge of the world . |
4 | He 's not seen me , they 've gone straight past , he has not yet come to terms with the fact that his mummy 's a queen . |
5 | A guilt compounded by the suicide five years ago of his sister Angela ( nine years his senior ) , with which he admits he has not yet come to terms . |
6 | He has not yet come to a conclusion on that . |
7 | This RTP ( reduce to products ) contract was expected to last two-and-a-half years , and has just about come to an end after less than two . |
8 | We may well find that what we are saying comes to others as God 's word with prophetic power , as it has already so come to us . |
9 | What happened next was to so profoundly influence the way the typesetting market operated that it still has n't fully come to terms with the consequences . |
10 | ‘ Colonel Fagg has never quite come to terms with the end of the Second World War , I 'm afraid , Elsa . |
11 | Third , we will set down the perspective of the Left within the Labour Party — the party that has very belatedly come to an awareness of the significance of constitutional politics and of the need for change . |
12 | The scheme of the 1954 Act is that if the lease is more than six months ( which is presumably the situation in your case ) and the premises are occupied for the purposes of your business , then the lease does not automatically come to an end . |
13 | Although its seven hundred years years old , it 's only just come to official notice . |